Areas of Expertise

  • Migration, asylum, and refugee issues
  • Return and reintegration
  • Deportations
  • Unaccompanied minors/child migration
  • Human trafficking and smuggling
  • Labor market integration of migrants and refugees
  • Migration policies in Germany, Europe, and the United States
  • Transatlantic relations and US-Latin American relations

Short Bio

Victoria Rietig is head of DGAP’s Migration Program.

Rietig began her professional career at the United Nations Institute for Training and Research (UNITAR) in New York, working on migration and development. She later worked at various think tanks in Washington, DC, including as a policy analyst for the Migration Policy Institute (MPI), a fellow at the Atlantic Council, and a senior migration fellow at the American Institute for Contemporary German Studies (AICGS) at Johns Hopkins University. Rietig also served as an independent expert for migration, asylum, and refugee issues, advising government offices and foundations, including the German development agency GIZ, US Department of State, UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office, Swiss Foreign Ministry (EDA), and Human Smuggling and Trafficking Center of the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

Rietig received a master’s degree in public policy from Harvard University with a focus on human trafficking and forced migration. She also earned an MA from Freie Universität Berlin with a focus on migration and integration. 

Languages

German, English, Spanish

 

[Last updated: January 2023]

Victoria Rietig

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Expertise

Publications

Migration Policy in South Africa

Lessons from Africa’s Migration Magnet for European Policymakers
Author/s
Ottilia Anna Maunganidze
Alia Fakhry
Victoria Rietig
Report

Migrationspolitik nach Merkel

Drei Themen könnten bei den Koalitionsverhandlungen strittig werden: die Aufnahme von Flüchtlingen, der Umgang mit Ausreisepflichtigen und die EU-Agentur Frontex.

Author/s
Victoria Rietig
IP
Creation date

Walking a Tightrope in Tunisia

The Aspirations and Limitations of Migration Policy Reform
Author/s
Tasnim Abderrahim
Alia Fakhry
Victoria Rietig
Report